Abstract

Cancer stem cells (CSCs) are responsible for cancer recurrence, treatment failure and metastatic dissemination. As such, the elimination of CSCs represents one of the most important approaches for the future of cancer treatment. Among other properties, CSCs show the activation of particular cell signalling pathways and the over-expression of certain transcription factors, such as SOX2. Herein, we describe a new model system to isolate stem-like cancer cells, based on the functional transcriptional activity of SOX2. Briefly, we employed a SOX2-enhancer-GFP-reporter system to isolate cancer cells with high SOX2 transcriptional activity by FACS sorting. The over-expression of SOX2 in this sub-population was validated by Western blot analysis and flow cytometry. SOX2-high cancer cells showed CSCs features, such as greater mammosphere forming ability, validating that this sub-population was enriched in CSCs. To further explore the model, we analysed other stemness characteristics in MCF7 and MDA-MB-231 breast cancer cell lines, corroborating that SOX2-high cells were more metabolically active, proliferative, migratory, invasive, and drug-resistant. SOX2-high MDA-MB-231 cells also showed a loss of E-cadherin expression, and increased Vimentin expression, consistent with an epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT). Therefore, endogenous SOX2 transcriptional activity and protein levels are mechanistically linked to aggressive phenotypic behaviours and energy production in CSCs.